February 7, 2008

   
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Trumpeting culture: French horns, clarinets and grand pianos are among the $482,000 worth of instruments the Japanese government donated to Costa Rica's National Center of Music in Moravia, the latest gift in the Asian country's 25-year “Cultural Donation” program here.

Photo courtesy of the Japanese Embassy in Costa Rica

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Ashes to ashes: Catholic believers lined up at Santa Teresita Church in Barrio Aranjuez, San José , so that a priest could put ash on their foreheads yesterday, Ash Wednesday, marking the start of the 40-day solemn celebration of Lent. Over 75% of Costa Ricans profess to be Roman Catholics, according to the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency's 2008 “The World Factbook.”

Ronald Reyes | Tico Times

Obama favorite among Costa Rica's Democrats Abroad
While U.S. citizens were glued to TV sets and online news sites to see who would win their country's primary elections, a group of Democrats in Costa Rica released results of a vote it carried out in here on Super Tuesday.
See More...
Super Bowl's losing Patriots find fans in poor Nicaraguan homes
Thousands of T-shirts set to arrive in Nicaragua this week might lead one to believe that the New England Patriots didn't blow their perfect season in Sunday's Super Bowl.
See More...
ICE testing out international text messaging
Now you can “txt yr frnds” in other countries from your Costa Rican cell phone, thanks to a new initiative by the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) currently in the testing phase.
OIJ jumps on elaborate $200,000 property fraud scheme
The Judicial Investigation Police announced successful raids on the homes of eight alleged con artists in San Francisco de Calles Blancos, San Ramón de Alajuela, El Alto de Guadalupe, Alajuela centro and Tres Ríos.
Repsol gas station employees caught stealing
Judicial Investigation police officers arrested two National Oil Refinery employees on Monday night. The individuals, last names Vargas and Rodríguez, stand accused of siphoning more than 400 liters of regular gasoline over at least three months.
TT Live Chat tomorrow: real estate tax
Join us tomorrow at 10 a.m. to ask KPMG tax expert Sergio García your questions about real estate taxes and what to look out for when buying or selling property. www.ticotimes.net.
New Surf Guide More
‘Punchy' than ‘Mushy'

I have tried surfing once, and would like to try again, but I am not a surfer.

 

Obama favorite among
Costa Rica's Democrats Abroad

While U.S. citizens were glued to TV sets and online news sites to see who would win their country's primary elections, a group of Democrats in Costa Rica released results of a vote it carried out in here on Super Tuesday.

Of Democrats Abroad members who voted at Holiday Inn in San José, 30 chose Illinois Sen. Barack Obama and 18 went with New York Sen. Hillary Clinton. One voter picked former South Carolina Sen. John Edwards, who has already dropped out of the race.

It was the first time the party held primary voting for its members worldwide, organizers said, tugging U.S. ex-pats along for the ride of the roller coaster that has been the Democratic race for a presidential nomination.

Paul Kloes, the chairman of Democrats Abroad of Costa Rica, said voting was steady but not overwhelming.

“All votes will count,” he said. “Democrats Abroad International has the same status as a state in the Democratic Party.”

Ballots were not kept secret and participants were required to join Democrats Abroad.

Whereas ex-pats have long been able to vote in the general election by absentee ballot, on Tuesday Democrats living overseas voted online or by walking into sites around the world to choose their favorite candidate to lead the party in the Nov. 4 presidential election.

Figures for overall voter participation outside the United States were not available, but inside the country CNN reported massive Democratic turnout, with states such as Arizona breaking their record.

At the time of posting this article, political analysts were still debating which of the two Democratic candidates led the race – some put Clinton ahead, with her big California win, while others said Obama was taking more states and more delegates; others called it a tie.

-Tico Times
Super Bowl’s losing Patriots find
fans in poor Nicaraguan homes
By Blake Schmidt
Nica Times Staff | bschmidt@ticotimes.net

Thousands of T-shirts set to arrive in Nicaragua this week might lead one to believe that the New England Patriots didn't blow their perfect season in Sunday's Super Bowl.

Though the Patriots lost 17-14 to the New York Giants, several hundreds of poor Nicaraguan kids will be winners thanks to a program to send the Patriots Super Bowl Champs T-shirts to those in need in Nicaragua.

The U.S. National Football League (NFL) is teaming up with the Christian group World Vision to distribute millions of dollars worth of the losing Super Bowl team's licensed Reebok apparel in poor parts of Nicaragua and Romania.

“World Vision helps us to ensure that no NFL apparel goes to waste,” David Krichavsky, the league's director of community relations, said in a statement. “We are pleased to find a good home for clothing by getting it to those who need it most.”

ICE testing out international text messaging

Now you can “txt yr frnds” in other countries from your Costa Rican cell phone, thanks to a new initiative by the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE) currently in the testing phase.

Though the international messages cost the same as any other text message (¢1.5), they do come with a catch. International text messages can only be sent to phones on certain networks.

In the United States, only T-Mobile phones can get the ICE text messages, while in Nicaragua only Movistar phones will receive them.

Also, international texting will only work on GSM phones – that is, any cell phone whose number starts with the number “8.”

-Tico Times
OIJ jumps on elaborate
$200,000 property fraud scheme

By Nick Wilkinson
Tico Times Staff | nwilkinson@ticotimes.net

The Judicial Investigation Police announced successful raids on the homes of eight alleged con artists in San Francisco de Calles Blancos, San Ramón de Alajuela, El Alto de Guadalupe, Alajuela centro and Tres Ríos.

According to police, the eight – Soto, Prenda, Arce, Argüello, Mata, Zuñiga, Gutiérrez and Navarro – used two estates of a foreigner in Heredia as security to acquire a $200,000 mortgage from a private bank. To use the estates as security, the alleged perpetrators, among them two lawyers, changed the legal representative of the Heredia estates at the National Registry, which keeps track of properties and corporations, and put them in their names.

Then, one of the con artists allegedly presented fake documents to set herself up as the guarantor for the mortgage. When notaries who worked for the legitimate foreign owner, who wasn't aware of the fraud, began the process of selling the properties, the money transferred to the con artist who requested the mortgage in the first place.

As soon as the mortgage was approved, one of the con artists requested the money be deposited in small amounts at intervals in the names of the other seven alleged con artists who were listed as her creditors.

Property owners in Costa Rica can avoid being the victim of this type of fraud by frequently checking at the National Registry to make sure no one has changed their legal representative without their knowledge.

Repsol gas station employees caught stealing

Judicial Investigation police officers arrested two National Oil Refinery employees on Monday night. The individuals, last names Vargas and Rodríguez, stand accused of siphoning more than 400 liters of regular gasoline over at least three months.

According to a press release, refinery officials discovered the missing gas problem in October 2007 at the Siquirres gas station, where the individuals worked and turned the matter over to authorities to investigate.

Vargas and Rodríguez worked as a guard and pump operator at the gas station and allegedly transported the stolen gas in their personal vehicles.

-Tico Times
New Surf Guide More ‘Punchy' than ‘Mushy'

I have tried surfing once, and would like to try again, but I am not a surfer.

There are many reasons for this. Principal among these is an absence of qual-ity waves in the English Home Counties where I grew up. However, there is something else: I think surfing has something of an image problem.

I realize that this is probably a minority view – certainly the bank balances of surf-label executives provide strong evidence against me – but hear me out.

When you think of surfing, what comes to mind? Exotic countries, white, sandy, palm-fringed beaches, blue skies and bluer waters inhabited by healthy, tanned, athletic people living wonderful stress-free lives. What's not to like? I hear you ask. You still don't follow me, do you?

The problem is, I think, that surf culture is a victim of its own success. Those images and their ubiquity now seem mocking because I know my wide-eyed, pasty-white face just does not fit the mold. Furthermore, as I sit writing at my cluttered desk, looking out at gray clouds spreading gloom across the polluted center of San José, I am jealous and resentful of the beautiful people who have the time and money to chase after paradise.

And it is more than just images. Surfing is its own alien, confusing, intimidating world from which the uninitiated can feel very much excluded. It has its own language, music and worldview that I can't seem to share. Try as I might, I just cannot bring myself to like Jack Johnson.

So when I was asked to review the new “H2O Surf Travel Guide: Costa Rica,” I was a little wary. My fears seemed confirmed when I opened a random page and read: “Consequences: You gonna get hurt. You gonna bleed! You will scare yourself silly, and you will be a victim of your destiny. That's why you surf.” Oh dear.

Thankfully, first impressions are not always to be trusted. The guide is informative, easy to use and has none of the pretensions I expected. It provides substantive information, rather than just a series of glossy images, and tells you all the mundane things you need to know: where to stay and eat, where to watch out for thieves, where to get stitched up when you take on a wave the guide warned you not to. It even tells you where to watch out for sharks.

The book, clearly, is designed for the serious surfer, so it is packed with specialized jargon. In fact, most of the book made very little sense to me. I managed to find some help at www.riptionary.com, an online glossary of surf lingo, but I am still at a loss to explain the exact benefits of a “perfectly hollowed drop,” or why precisely I might want my dings repaired, but no matter because this is not just pointless wordiness. Rather, it is clearly the product of author Jonathan Yonkers' overwhelming passion for the sport – a passion that is engagingly disarming and cannot help but rub off on even his most unsuspecting and cynical reader.

It is not just the text, either; the book is nicely put together across the board. Who cares if the picture shows an overcast and leaden sky? Just check out that A-frame, mae. It's the Tico surfers who really know the scene, so the photos invariably show them, rather than Gringos. The book is clearly organized by region, and easy-to-follow symbols tell you whether or not a wave is suitable for your level and what services you can expect to find at a particular beach. To steal the lingo, it is “punchy” rather than “mushy.”

It is true that I did not understand much of what I read, that I cannot tell you how accurate the information is, and I do not know whether the book represents value for money. I may not be one of the beautiful people, I may not know a beach break from a point break, and I may not even be able to stand up on a board.

I do, however, feel inspired. With this guide, I feel it is safe to go back into the water.

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